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For the year 1913, the Hst no_falling aggrezate purposes is even greater the previous year—$283,672,222 $258,751,698 in 1911 Andrew Carnegi remains the “gtar giver of gifts.” His beneficences for the vear reach the enormous total *of $135,060,000, almost oage-half as much as was contributed by all the other llh‘::;.l—g‘xfindafl Amerl_”_ that period. e approximate scare the steel masmi:ln’- gifts now stands: college profe of as follows: 5 ensions for 332, gno,ooo; and struggling $26,090.000; | hero funds, peace funds and miscel- laneous, $113,000,000; Carnegie 3 oration. $176,000,000. The total “mounta to the stupendous height of $332,800,000. This gives Mr. Carnegie a lead in the race for distributing his closest competitor being Ji . Rockefeller with a credit of only 3175, Last year Mr. Carnegie furnished the funds for the starting of one hun- dred and thirty-eight libraries, at a total cest of $2,501,070. The Carnegie Technical Schools in Pittsburgh, Pa., received an additional $2,200,000 for 3 fine arts department. The Carnegis Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching was further emriched $2,000,000 gift from its founder. e Federation of North American Indians, organized in January, 1812, was given $850,000 for a headquarters building at the national capital. The Yale Fores- | try Sehool received a gift of $100,000. By the will of Mrs, Robert N, Carson: of Philadelphia the Carson College for Orphan Girls was enriched to the ex- tent of $6,000,000. Peter A. B. Widener executed a e e — BACKACHE A WARNING ALL SHOULD HEED It is One of the First Signs of Kidney Troubles, if Neg- lected, Serious Diseases Follow No one can be well ‘and healthy unless the kidneys work properly and keep the blood pure. When they be-; come ciogged up and imactive, nature has a way of warning you. Backache is one of the first symp- toms. You *may also be troubled with disagreeable, annoying bladder disorders; have attacks of lumbago or rheumatism: become nervous, tired, and feel all worn-out; puffy swellings show under the eyes or in the. feet and ankles; and many other symp- | toms are noticed. If they are ne lected, dropsy, diabetes, or Bright's disease, which so often prove fatal, may result. It is mot only dangerous, but need- less for you to suffer and endure the tortures of these troubles, for the new discovery. Croxome, quickly and surely ends ail such misery. g There is no more effective remedy known for the prompt cure of all such troubles than this mnew, scientific preparation, because it removes the cause. It soaks right into the kidneys, through the walls and linings; cleans out the clogged up pores; neutralizes and dissolves the pbisonous urie acid and waste matter that lodge in the joints and muscles and cause those terrible rheumatic pains, and en the kidmeys filter and sift the poisom out of the blood and drive it from the system. You will find Croxone different from all other remedies. There i3 aothing else on earth like it. It is 50 prepared that it is practically im- possible to take it into the human system without results. You can secure an original pack- age of Croxone at triffing cost frem any first-class drug store, such as that of Lee & Osgood Co. All drugsists are authorized to personally return the purchase price if Croxone should fail in a single case. Three doses a day for a few days is often all that Is ever needed to cure the worst backache, re- lieve rheumatic pains, or overcome urinary disorders. | aguinst | enother million H to I“mflu the Harry BElkins of trust for $4,000,000 in four per securities to be used as an emn- dowment f the Widener Memeorial Scheal for Children. He gave te Harvard for & build- empori; F. Baker, of New York city, 000, ous 83, be- an anonym :‘!!lm 500,000 . _ Thomas . A e twork lgh;w%o!‘k‘dw‘ of, them ome of the largest -:5 ehurches In Amerion that — | largest selling fae| the world. the Institute of Technology, te be|the Me for a site en the Cambridge side " the Charles River and for new idings. The late Richard T. Crane, the mil- ifonalre ironmaster of Chicago, 2n ag: gressive opponent of the higher educa. tion, willed $2,135.000 to charity. For a pension and lity fund for the benefit of the employees of the Crane Company he gave $1,000.000 and an other million to provide homes in the country near Chicago for helpless children and their mothers, preference belng given to those who have been & by their husbands. To the United Charities of Chicago, as en en- dowment fund for the Mary Crane Nursery, he gave $100,000. Mrs. Caroline Neustadter, widow of Henry Neustadter, formerly of San Francisco, bequeathed $2,000,000 to philanthropy. Half of this was set aside for the estadlishment ef.a vaca- tion home for the poor and needy and for convaleseents, to be kmown as the Neustadter Home. Mrs. Neustadter's charftable institutions include a gift to the United Hebrew Charities of $100,000. A special fund of $100,040, to be I:nown as the Louis W, Neustad- ter Home Fund, was given to Mt. Sinal Hospital. By the will of Edwin Bancroft Foote of New York $2,000,000 was divided among charitable institutions in New York, New Haven and Malne. Mr. Foote gave $200,000 each to the New Haven Hospital, the New Haven Home ged and Destitute Women, the Home for Poor Boys of New York in Maine, and the Preshyterian Hospital of New York. © 8. Johnson of Scranton, Pa.. willed $2,000,000 to Scranton for a Manual Training School. AlMfred Fitler Moore of Philadephia bequeathed $2,000,000 for the creation of a.school of electrical engineering. The estate of Mrs. Tootie McGregory Terry, Memaroneck, N. Y. was be- queathed to the A. M. McGresory Home for the Aged in East Cleveland, 0., an institution founded by Mrs. Ter- ry’s first husband. The amount of this bequest was $2,000,000. The Jate Henry F. Dimock of New York bequeathed $1907,229 to Yale University. Jullus Rosenwald of Chicago con- tributed $1,000,000 to the cause of sclentific farming through the medium of the crop improvement committee of the Councll of Grain Exchanges. Mr. Rosenwald celebrated his fiftieth birth- day by giving $687.500 to educational and _general charities and $250,000 to the University of Chicago for a wom- en’s gymnasium. He employs Jane Addams, Julia Lathrop and Sherman C. Kig‘nley ds his almoners, with Judge M as general adviser, and never questions their action. Mrs. John Stewart Kennedy of New York city gave to Hartford Theological Seminary $260.000 for the endowment 9¢ the Hartford School of Missions. The Hartford School of Rellgious Ped- agogy was given an equal sum, In diticn, Mrs. Kennedy promised 100,000 for a new buflding to house e students of the above two schools. Her generosity has also made possible a home for Women Christlan Workers on the East Side of Manhattan, cost- 3400, ohn Armitrong Chaloner. the ecoen- tric mil maire of Merry Mills, Va., bhas conveyed his entire property, val- ued at $1,500.000, in trust to the Vir- ginia Trust Company of Richmond, naming the University of Virginia and the University of North Carolina as residusry legatees (each to receive $500,000), while nine other educational institutions will receive $10,000 each. Ome of Mr. Chaloner's bequests was $10,000 to the town of Roanoke Rapids, Va., the interest to be expended an- ;n'us.fly for a Christmas treal for school <children. The late Henry Strong of Lake Gen- eva, Wisconsin, left provision in his will that $1,500,000 should be used to Valentines at CRANSTON'S BERMUDA WEST INDIES, PANAMA CANAL.' WINTER CRUISES. Large steamers, fine servi - g ot ice, rea: be made with me for preferred ac- commodations. Tickets to Georgia, Florida and all Southern Resorts and to Europe by all lines. Mail orders given prompt attemtion. John A. Dunn, Steamship and Tourist Agent. 50 Main Street JOSEPH BRADFORD BOOK BINDER Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order 103 BROADWAY Telephone 263 Advica to Mothers Have you bad ;. Da0¥'s pBOIOETADD LAIGHTON, The Phezographer, Opposite Norwich Savings Society. % TRAVELERS' DIRaGT'» New L.ondon (NGRWICH) Line - NEW YORK STEAMERS Maine and Steamer Chapin 1o Now Yot ';gézunfi: um&fi;fiv&i on ‘{h und _an To view of the waonderful sky il water front of Manhattan lslan Steamer lvaves New Lanaon at il p. §> "Eocpt Sundays, due New York, Plor 0, Hast River. at s.45, and Pler 4u. NORWICH ——FO— New England Steamship Co. New York CHELSEA LINE 905 R ‘ednesda. 1 Freight f-'.c-'xr-.‘a' un | u": ‘u ™ . J¥.V. KNOUSE. Agenw | Conn., bequeathed to the Charity Or- | ganization Soclety of New Ycrk $420, {600, and to the of | $40,000. the most psychological laboratory in the world. It is one of | a group of three which Mr. Rockefeller will build on land 1 the Ref: i a stast of scientific women who wil] {nvestizate the crlmh'u!-l' of the women detained at the reformatory. Several charitable institutions share in the million-dollar estate of William of | ‘the } arder—“really does” - overcome gestion, epsia, sourness in fve mini “Really does” put'.bad’ stemachs in indi- . gas, heartburn and tes—that just Pape's. pepsin the stomach regulator in If what you eat ferments umps, you belch gas and undigested food and head is dizzy and aches; breath dysp distress vanishes. ishi it's truly aston- 108t marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. - A large fifty-cent case of Pape’s Di- apepsin will give you a hundred del- lars’ worth of satisfactign or _your drugglst hands you your money back. - It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stom- ach regulated. home—should always be kept handy in It belongs in your case of sick, sour, upset stomach dur- ing the day or at night. It's the quick- est ,surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world. | Hal} Penfold of New York city, who died Sept. 18. The new library of the University of California owes its existence to a be- quest of the late Charies Franklin Doe, who directed that $870,000 should be given to the university' for this pur- pose. Charles H. Pratt of Boston. Mass., left $750,000 to the Massachuseits In- stitute of Technology, the money to be used for a school of naval architee- Mass., left her estate of $740,000 to Harvard University, Tufts College and 2 number of religious and charitable { institutions. ‘William Patterson Young an_eccen- tric bachelor of Newark, N. ded that his fortune of should revert to the Protestant pal diocese of Newark for the erection of |a chureh in memory of his mother. An odd provision of Mr. Young's will was that all of his gold and silver ornaments be broken into scrap and melted into bullien to destrov their identity and then become part of the Dbequest. The will of Colonel D, Wick of Youngstown, Ohio, who was lost on the Titanic, requested that $700,000 should be distributed among the char- itles his native eity. J. Plerpont Morgan gave the Univer- sity of the South, at Sewance, Tenn. $150,000 for its endowment fund: Trinity College Hartford $200.000 for a library . and administration building, to be known as Willlams Hall; Peabody College for Teachers and the Church Unity Movement, $100.~ 000 each: the University of Gottingen: and the London Young Men's Christian Association, $50,000 each; his gifts for the year reaching the sum of $620.000. John D. Rockfeller has only $536,000 the medical department of the Western Reserve Unlversity, of Cleveland, Ohio, and $210,000 to De Pauw University, and other small It is difficult to estimate the amount given by Mrs. Russell Sage during the year, es her philanthropy lends {tself to almost every fleld of helpful en- deavor and her name is withheld as frequently as pessible. The published reports are not proportionate to the amount 'actfially given, During the year just ended Mrs. Sage is credited with giving $518,500—$200,000 for a new freshman dormitery at Harvard, $75.000 to Vassar, 915,000 for the pur- chase of Marsh Island, in Leuisiana, for a bird refuge, and many other smaller gifts. Mrs. Helen M. Holly of Stamford, poor Stamford. The will of Francis Amory benefits the Boston Lying=In Hoapital to the extent of 2500.600. maklng hls total Dbenefactions $576,000. Mrs. Jane K. Sather of Oakland, California, dee roperty valued at P 1 $500,000 to the University of Califernia. George Bastmen, presideant’ of the Bastman Kodak Company, presented $600,00¢ to the Unlversity of Raches- ter, and the late Dr. Francia Bacen of New Haven, Cona., the same amount te_Yale University. Bamuel P, Avery of Hartford, Conn., presented to Columbla University the | wedding anniversary with a gift to | medical {Institute for Medical Research. This {York and will represent an expendi- ! ture of $400,000. new Avery library bulldine. The cost of the building s $500,000. James B. Brady, ter known as “Dlamond Jim Brady,” made a gift which will amount to $500,000 to the Johns Hopkins University hospital, in Baitimore, Md. Miss Flora K. Isham of New York city presented the land necessary to connect Isham Park—established in memory of her brother, William B. Isham, by his daughter, Mrs. Julia Isham Taylor—and the United States Ship Canal. Its estimated value is $500,000. Max Bamberger of Philadelphia be- queathed $450,000 of his estate to char- 1ty, $400,000 of which is to maintain a Jewlsh Children' Seaside Home at | Atlantic City, N. J. The_will of Eugene Kelly, banker, of New York, gave to St Patrick’s Ca- thedral $400,000 for the erection of the Lady chapel and for stained gla: windows. By the terms of the will of Augustus W. Openhyn of New York, $410,000 reverted to New York hospitals and Columbia University to aid in discov- eries for a cure f~— cancer. Sebastian D. Lewrence of New Haven, Conn., willed $407,000 to New London. Conn., for a public hosnital for an almshouse and for lesser charities ers, N. Y., distributed $400,000. The Spain Ridge Tuherculosis Hospital at Yonkers. received $250,000. Paris Singer, an American, astonished the Parisians by celebrating his silver Alexander Smith Cochran of Yonk-] ties. sclenca of a fully equipped institute will be conducted upon the lines of the Rockfeller Institute of New Like Mrs. Bage, Miss Helen Gould dislikes publicity, and for that reason is lower down on the list of great givers for the year than she would be were her numerous eharities permitted to get inte print, It is known, how- ever, that she contributed $200,000 to the national beard of the Young Wom- en's Christian Association in New York eity, $100,000 to Vassar College for 2 students’ hall, and $35,000 to the Young Men's Christian Association building in Pertsmeuth, Va, in all $325,000, Ons of the mest unusual willy ever rosorded in Philadelphia was made ublie Sept. 4, when Willlam Hewkins eqgpteathed §360,860 fox disirihution &=, familicy who w, The om $2,660 to :wese givem clear tities (e the preper- §5.860, and the bemeficiaries, mamy of whoml had never seen their lamdlord, GEN. Coprright, 1918, by The Press Bublishing Co. (The New York Eveniog Wodd). 4—JOHN HAY. . T the Centennial Exposition I was taking my sisters and my son 0 see the &reat gicture “The Slege of Paris.” PICKETT. ‘We stopped below to 100k &t another picture, ““The Shooting of the Archbishop,” which was n charge of a Frencthumen and \German. -To #mpress upon the minds of the young people the \_in:d. Deginning: tality of the place, read ®cenes of the picture I repeated a little poem which I had “A squad of regular infantry In the Commune’s closing Had captured a band of rebels By the walls of Pere la Chaise. There were desperate men, wild womeony And dark-eyed Amazon girls, 4nd one little boy with peach-down check And yellow clustering curls.” ‘When T had finishred the Frenchman weas so pleased witn . the poem that he asked me Wwhere be vould get #t. Not re- membering the author, I wrote it for him, which so excited ‘his gratitude that he insisted upon offering me the hospi- slving me a card of edmittance which “The lady wiho present this and ail the peoples she bring, admit.™ 1 thenked him without any thougirt of accepting his generosity. Put several daye efterwand I sousht sheiter there from a terrible storm and heard the Ger- man vepoating the lkines in the guttural voive and burry accent of his race: “Und von leetle boy mit peach-dowm sheek “Yes,"” “Gen. George'E. Pickett's wife?™ “Yes, sir.’ my son. Und yellow glustering gurls. At & @nmer in Washington at the home of Senator Pendleton of Ohto, T wes requested to relate this little episode, and repeat the poem. As T recfted the last line a gentleman diagonally apposite, a ‘well known diplomat., distinguished for courtesy end a stiokler for all the littls conventionalities of social life, surprisad me by taking the centre rose from e bouquet, kissing it and bowing, and throwing it acrass the tadle to me. After ths dinner he came up and eaid: “And. you eme George Piokett's wife?” “I knew Gen. (Pickett in Springfield when I was a boy adout so high™ *Why,” I said\in surprise, “you seem ®o0 Young; almost young enough to be “And yet T was Mr. Lincoln’s private Secretary during the war, and I remem- ber so well many conversations with him about your husband, especially after the dattle of Gettysture. And sometime I would Mke to tell you of them. Mr. Lincoln was prouder, I think, of the last charge of Gettysburs because it was led by the cadet who was appointed through his effort, than of anything dome by the Unton soldiers.™ “Yes, my husband was studying law in Tilinois and was disappointed when his cousins and' other kinsmen received cadetships at West Foint and he did not, feeting that he Would have to yield to his uncle's wisaes and be a lawyer in spite of himself. While he was dilizently trying to becoms reconciled to his. apperent fate, Mr. Lincoln learned of his martial ambition end procured an appotntment for him through Representative John G. Stuart of the Third Hiinols District.” . “Mr. Lincoin was surDrised to fearn that Gen. Pickett had resigned his eom- ‘mission in the United States Army,” said Mr. Hay, “as he could have remaiped et his post in the territory which he had saved to his country, end would not have been forced to fight against his peonle.” I gave Mr. Hay the reason. for my Soldler's action and Gescribed his perilous home, in which Mr. Hay was deeply interested. “Mr. Lincoln thought that George Plckett would remeain under the old flag, loving it so as a boy and being such a stickler for the Uniom, his uncle being e Union man, as was also his almost godfather end devoted friend, Mr. Browning. Do you know, by the way, that desr Mrs. Browning bas becoma en inmate of the home which sha founded and endowed when she Wwas wealthy 7 “I wonder that Tiimois and her friends would have permitted such a thing,” said I ‘Ut could not be helped,” replied Mr. Hay. “She would not accept pri- vate gifts, but felt that fn the insti- tution founded by her she was merely collecting interest on her anoney.” Spealting of the poem T had recited the said: “The Germen verslon of it sound- ed s0 beautiful T almost wished I had written dt in that way, but your reci- tation of the original lines gave them such en added beauty that I am satisfied with them. “You wrote it?’ I asked. *Yes,” he replied. “ ow, there are two surprises—I have one in learning that ou are Mrs. Pfokett, and you have one in finding that I am the guthor of the Mnes. By reciting my version you have double-knotted the tie of friendship I Bad with the General, and with you as his wife.” The great Secretary remained my frlend, and when *Pickett and (s Men"” was published, he wrote o me these words: “T have resd your wondenful and beawiiful story. I notice that the Semt chaptar of the book Degins with the name of my friend, Abraham Lincokn, and tthat the last chapter of the book also begins with ‘Afweham Lincoin.’ you. I thank Untsl T read bis letter T had not noticed this coincidence. Mr. Hawking, who died in his ninety-eighth year, never married, and was sald to have devoted his entire wealth to relleving -nverty which he investigated personally. - That children may enjoy fresh air, good food and intelligent -instruec- tion in the wonders of outdoors, C. C. Goodhue, gave to the Children’s Ald Society her beautiful estate, taining fifty acres of land and a per- fectly appointed mansion on Staten Island for that purpose. Mrs. on- Miss Emily H, Bourne of New York city erected, at a cest of $167,000, the Bourne Workshop for the Blind New York city, most completely equipped workshop of its kind in the country and will teach the making of brooms, mops and the caning of chairs te one hundred blind ‘persons. in ‘This building is the Ever since Nathaa Straus, the recent Progressive candidate for governor of gew York, made a pilgrimage to Pales- ne, Jewish circles as to whether he would be converted to the cause of Zionism. While in*Palesting, Mr. Straus, con- tributed $69,008 to ° communal . founded several stations for thé great poverty he met with; in Jerusalem. . there has been speculation in and and charitable institutions there, Witliam K. Vanderbilt of New York provided the funds for the New Chil- | Mo, dren’s Theatre on the roof of the Cen- | tury Theatre, New York. ture playhouse Vanderbilt's cherished objects, for he has long been iuterested in an ideal place for the amusement of children. _Charles Birthright, colored, born in Virginia in 1833, and died at Clarkson, willed §50,000 to Stillman Insti- tute of ‘Tuscaloosa, Ala., for the sup- DOrt of young colored men for the ministry. He was born a slave and remained true to his master, Major Birthright, accompanying him through most of the war as his body servant. This minia- American art provided by the will of the late Edwin Abbey, the famous artist, who left a fund of $20,000 to purchase the best pictures shown annually in the Royal Academy to be sent to the Corcoran Art Gallery at Washington, D. C, to become the property of the American nation, Mr. Abbey’s picture, “Hamiet,” and one hundred and thirty drawings from the Metropolitan Museum of Art of New Yorik city. The aggregate ameunt given te the colleges and various institutions of learning of the United States during the year is $14,146,480. Exclusive of the individual gifts already recorded, the total amount of the vear's benevo. lences of every discription reaches the enormous figure of $53,195,443. realizes one of Mr.' EGG nut. Egg to the smaller sizes. CENTRAL WHARF CHESTNUT (“Nut”) | STOVE (“Range”) 3 Egg used with No. 2 Chestnut (at a saving of 75¢ per ton) has given satisfaction in many cases. A few blows of & hammer will reduce a hod full of Our assortment of LUMBER is extensive CHAPPELL, CO. Telephones ('uF“mmn) ‘BROKEN (“Furnace™) In order to secure any of the Chestnut and Stove sizes, we have been COMPELLED to take a large pro- portion of Egg, in each cargo' received. The result is that our supply of Chestnut and Stove is extremely lim- ited, but we have a fair supply of Egg and No. 2 Chest- 150 MAIN STREET EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR Universal Rubber Roofing We have carried this roofing for a number of years, Those who have once used this roofing when wanting more ask for the Universal. Note price. The lowest we have ever sold it for, 1-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.50. 2-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.85. COMPETITOR ROOFING 1-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.25. 2-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.50. Above have nails and cement in each roll. SPECIAL PN Kelly Axes, unhung, 75c. Keen Kutter, warranted, $1.00. —— The Household Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street Canadian Apples. The most prolific crop of peaches and apples ever known has been ob- tained this year in the Okanagon d trict of British Columbia. It has been on such a scale that the mark ing system of the valley has tempora- rily broken down. Hundreds of tons of peaches have been left to r ground, and for the same re bountiful tomato crop, for which pro duct the district is famous, has, large extene been sacrificed. The ple crop, fortunately, can be stored and shipped out by degrees 8 prairie provinces, which can take all the fruit that is grown by British umbia. In this province within a few years upwards of a hundred thousand acres of fruit must have been brought into bearing. and the congestion traffic resulting on thes conditions coupled with the extraor dinary heavy crop, is responsible for the conditions referred to. next twelve months another railw system will be serving the Okanagon district, and the fruit srowers not likely to experience a repetition of tk year's car shortage in the future. a N Rheumatism in Shoulder can be relieved and cured by them. Also invaluable for Pains, Stiffness or Soreness of joints or muscles Apply Wherever There Is Paln, Constspation, Biliousness, Indis , ete, Brandreths Pilis Entirely Vegeiable. L 1913 OVERLAND CAR is here, Telephone 904-5 and get a demonstration of the best car for the money on the market for next year. M. B. Ring Auts Co. Chestnut Strest of | changing | Within the | THERE Is no advertising medium o Bastern Connecticut equal to The Buls let'n fo: business results. PLUMBING AND STEAM FITTING Sanitary Plumbiny A peep into an up-to-date bathroony i8 only less refreshing than the bath | itzelf. " During the summer you will the more look”to the bath for bodily | eomfort. I will show you samples and plans of the porcelain and other tubg and give you estimates for the work of putting them in in the best mannep from a sanitary standpoint—and guare antee the entite job. J. E. TOMPKINS, €7 West Main Strees S. F. GIBSON [ Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Ricoardson aad HBoyniwa Furnaces. > West ' 1. F. BURNS, Hiealing and Flumbing, 92 trauklin Strea; ROBERT J.COCHRANE Main Strest Nor cum Fltiing mbing. Stemm Fiitiuag 18 West Main St. Norwich, Coms Agent N. B. O. Sheat Packing anrlg i,erth Do I} Nowe Den’t put it off any Come { my office now and le: ve yo i iclv Y. I Can sty You have many ot the opportunity. C. M. WILLIAMS, Tel. 670 218 MAIN ST, Notwithstanding the Fire wo are still doing busincss at the old stand and the quality of our work is Jupl the aame as over—"The Best." Nothiag but skilled labor emploved e=d best materiais used in our work, STETSON & YOUNG, Carpenters and Builders, | Telephene. 50 West Main St {WHITE ELEPHANT CAFE d DAN MURPHY & CO. ‘Ales, Wines, Liguors and Cigars .. Corner of Water and Market Sta